Bibliography

This bibliography concerns references in English literature that mention the recorder directly or indirectly. A more convenient and flexible way of exploring it is via the Zotero citation database underlying this web-site. The Zotero interface is straightforward to use and allows you to export selected entries in a variety of formats and to create your own citation lists in a range of journal styles. All you need is your web-browser. This will be of particular assistance to students and researchers.

  • Addy, Sydney O. 1888. A Glossary of Words Used in the Neighbourhood of Sheffield Including a Selection of Local Names, and Some Notices of Folklore Games, and Customs. Ludgate Hill, London: English Dialect Society / Trubner & Co. https://archive.org/details/glossaryofwordsu00addyuoft.
  • Adorno, Theodor W. 1956. Dissonanzen: Musik in der verwalteten Welt. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.
  • Galfridus Anglicus. 1449. Promptorium Parvulorum. Winchester.
  • Bartholomaeus Anglicus. 1988. On the Properties of Things: John Trevisa’s Translation of Bartholomaeus Anglicus, de Proprietatibus Rerum: A Critical Text. Edited by John de Trevisa. Translated by Trevisa, John de. Oxford University Press.
  • Anthony, James R. 1985. French Baroque Music from Beaujoyeulx to Rameau. Revised and Expanded Edition. 2nd ed. New York: W.W. Norton & Co.
  • Ashbee, Andrew. 1993. Records of English Court Music, VII (1485-1558). Aldershot: Scolar Press.
  • Ashbee, Andrew, David Lasocki, Peter Holman, and Fiona Kisby. 1998. A Biographical Dictionary of English Court Musicians, 1485-1717. Aldershot & Brookfield, VT.: Ashgate.
  • Bacon, Francis. 1627. Sylva Sylvarum, Or, A Natural History in Ten Centuries. London: William Lee.
  • Baines, Anthony. 1948. “James Talbot’s Manuscript (Christ Church Library Music Ms 1187): I. Wind Instruments.” Galpin Society Journal 1: 9–26.
  • Baldwin, Elizabeth, and David Mills. 2002. Paying the Piper: Music in Pre-1642 Cheshire Early Drama. Art and Music Monograph Series 29. Kalamazoo, Michegan: Medieval Institute Publications, Western Michigan University.
  • Baldwin, Elizabeth, Lawrence M. Clopper, and David Mills, eds. 2007. Records of Early English Drama. Cheshire: (Including Chester). 1. Introduction, The Records. Province of York and Diocese of Chester. Acton to Chester C. 1624. London & Toronto: British Library & University of Toronto Press:
  • Bale, John. 1548–1549. Scriptorum illustrium maloris Brytanniae, hoc est, Angliae, Cambriae, ac Scotiae Summarium … Catalogus [A Summary of the famous writers of Great Britain, that is, of England, Wales and Scotland]. Ipswich & Wesel: John Overton.
  • Ballester, Jordi. 2000. “La flauta dulce en la antigua corona de Aragón a finales del siglo XIV: Nuevas aportaciones [The Recorder in the Ancient Kingdom of Aragón at the End of the Fourteenth Century: New Contributions].” Revista de flauta de pico 15: 9–12.
  • Bashford, Christina. 1991. “Perrin and Cambert’s ‘Ariane, Ou Le Mariage de Bacchus’ Re-Examined.” Music & Letters 72 (1): 1–26.
  • Bergmann, Walter. 1959. “Henry Purcell’s Recorder Music.” Recorder News, New Series 25: 9–11.
  • Bergmann, Walter. 1957. “Golden Rules for Ensemble Playing.” Recorder News, no. June: 191.
  • Bergmann, Walter. 1972. “26 Golden Rules for Ensemble Playing.” American Recorder 13 (3): 76–77.
  • Bergmann, Walter. 1976. “Golden Rules for Recorder Playing.” Recorder & Music 5 (6): 191.
  • Boragno, Pierre. 1998. “Flûtes du moyen age: éléments de recherche [Members of the Flute Family of the Middle Ages: Elements of Research].” Les cahiers de musique médiévale 2: 6–20.
  • Boyd, Morrison Comegys. 1973. Elizabethan Music and Musical Criticism. 2nd ed. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
  • Bradley, Robert J. 1992. “Musical Life and Culture at Savoy, 1420-1450.” Ph.D. dissertation, New York: City University of New York.
  • Braggard, Roger, and Ferdinand J. de Hen. 1967. Musical Instruments in Art and History. Translated by B. Hopkins. London: Barrie & Rockliff.
  • Branagh, Kenneth, Steph Lady, and Frank Darabont. 1994. Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein: The Classic Tale of Terror Reborn. Edited by Diana Landau. London: Pan Macmillan.
  • Brossard, Sébastien de. 1703. Dictionnaire de la musique contenant une explication des termes Grecs, Latins, Italiens, & François les plus usitez dans la musique [Dictionary of Music Containing an Explanation of Greek, Latin, Italian and French Terms Most Used in Music]. 2nd ed. Paris: Christophe Ballard. http://imslp.org/wiki/Dictionnaire_de_musique_%28Brossard,_S%C3%A9bastien_de%29.
  • Brown, Howard Mayer. 1995. “The Recorder in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.” In The Cambridge Companion to the Recorder, edited by John Mansfield Thomson and Anthony Rowland-Jones, 1–25. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Brüggen, Frans. 1999. “Morgan ist tot [Morgan is Dead].” Tibia 24 (3): 558. http://www.moeck.com/uploads/tx_moecktables/1999-3.pdf.
  • Buch, David J. 1994. Dance Music from the Ballets de Cour 1575 – 1651. Historical Commentary, Source Study, and Transcriptions from the Philidor Manuscripts. Wendy Hilton Dance and Music Series 7. Stuyvesant, NY: Pendragon Press.
  • Burney, Charles. 1776–1789. General History of Music, from the Earliest Ages to the Present Period. 4 vols. London: Printed for the author, and sold by T. Becket et al. http://imslp.org/wiki/A_General_History_of_Music_(Burney,_Charles).
  • Cambell, Margaret. 1975. Dolmetsch: The Man and His Work. London: Hamish Hamilton.
  • Carter, Henry H. 1961. Dictionary of Middle English Musical Terms. Indiana University Humanities Series 45. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
  • Castellani, Michèle. 2000. “Encontradas flautas de hueso en China en una excavación del neolítico [Bone flutes found in China in a Neolithic Excavation].” Revista de flauta de pico 15: 38.
  • Chambers, John, ed. 1829. A General History of the County of Norfolk. Vol. 2. London: John Stacey. http://books.google.com.au/books/about/A_general_history_of_the_county_of_Norfo.html?id=_Q4HAAAAQAAJ&redir_esc=y.
  • Chappel, William, and Sir G.A. Macfarren. 1855–1856. Popular Music of the Olden Time: A Collection of Ancient Songs, Ballads, and Dance Tunes, Illustrative of the National Music of England … Also, a Short Account of the Minstrels. 2 vols. London: Cramer Beale & Chappell. http://imslp.org/wiki/Popular_Music_of_the_Olden_Time_(Chappell,_William).
  • Collier, John P. 1831. Annals of the Stage from the Origin of the Drama in England to the Restoration. Vol. 1. London: John Murray.
  • Crewsden, Richard. 2000. Apollo’s Swan and Lyre – Five Hundred Years of the Musicians’ Company. London: The Boydell Press.
  • Cust, Lionel. 1917–1918. “The Lumley Inventories.” Walpole Society 6: 29.
  • Davis, Alan. 1996. “Purcell and the Recorder.” Recorder Magazine 16 (1): 9–15.
  • Dessy, Raymond, and Lee Dessy. 2001. “Sound-off: Recorder Mikes: What Sounds Good, Is Good!” http://members.iinet.net.au/~nickl/articles/mikes.pdf.
  • Dolmetsch, Arnold. 1915. The Interpretation of the Music of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries Revealed by Contemporary Evidence. Handbooks for Musicians. London: Novello. http://imslp.org/wiki/The_Interpretation_of_the_Music_of_the_17th_and_18th_Centuries_(Dolmetsch,_Arnold).
  • Douce, Francis. 1807. Illustrations of Shakespeare, and on Ancient Manners: With Dissertations on the Clowne and Fools of Shakespeare; on the Collection of Popular Tales Entitled  Gesta Romanorum; and on the English Morris Dance. 2 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees & Orme. https://archive.org/details/illustrationssh01doucgoog.
  • Edwards, Warwick A. 1974. “The Sources of Elizabethan Consort Music.” Ph.D. dissertation, Cambridge: University of Cambridge.
  • Eppelsheim, Jürgen. 1961. Das Orchester in den Werken Jean-Baptiste Lullys [The Orchestra in the Works of Jean-Baptiste Lully]. Münchner Veröffentlichungen zur Musikgeschichte 7. Tutzing: Hans Schneider.
  • Fétis, François J. 1876. Histoire générale de la musique. Edited by Edouard L. Fétis. Vol. 5. Paris: Firmin-Didot.
  • Fleming, Michael. 2000. “Some Points Arising from a Survey of Wills and Inventories.” Galpin Society Journal 53: 301–11.
  • Flickinger, Tatiana. 2019. “Die Blockflöte in »Harry Potter« [The recorder in ‘Harry Potter’].” Windkanal, no. 3.
  • Flood, W.H. Grattan. 1905. A History of Irish Music. Dublin: Browne & Nolan. http://www.libraryireland.com/IrishMusic/Contents.php.
  • Flood, W.H. Grattan. 1912–1913. “Entries Relating to Music in the English Patent Rolls of the 15th Century.” The Musical Antiquary
  • Fountain, Henry. 1999. “After 9,000 Years, Oldest Playable Flute Is Heard Again.” New York Times on the Web. September 28. http://www.nytimes.com/library/national/science/092899sci-archeology-china.html.
  • Foxe, John. 1563. Acts and Monuments. London: John Day. http://www.johnfoxe.org/.
  • Gage, Sir John. 1822. The History and Antiquities of Hengrave, in Suffolk. London: James Carpenter, Joseph Brooker & John Deck. https://books.google.com.au/books?id=IQE2AQAAMAAJ.
  • Gairdner, James, and Robert H. Brodie, eds. 1895. Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, of the Reign of Henry VIII  Preserved in the Public Record Office, the British Museum, and Elsewhere in England. Vol. 14/2. London: Her Majesty’s Stationery Office (HMSO). http://www.british-history.ac.uk/search/series/letters-papers-hen8.
  • Galloway, David, ed. 1984. Norwich 1540-1642. Records of Early English Drama. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • Gibson, Karen Bush. 2012. The Amazon River. Rivers of the World. Newark, Mitchell Lane.
  • Godwin, Joscelyn. 1977. “Main Divers Acors.” Early Music 5 (2): 148–59.
  • Godwin, Joscelyn. 1973. “Robert Fludd’s Symbolic Recorder.” American Recorder 14 (1): 17.
  • Gosson, Stephen. 1579. The Schoole of Abuse: Conteining a Plesaunt Inuective Against Poets, Pipers, Plaiers, Iesters and Such Like Caterpillers of a Commonwealth; Setting VP the Flagge of Defiance to Their Mischieuous Exercise, and Ouerthrowing Their Bulwarkes, by Prophane Writers, Naturall Reason, and Common Experience: A Discourse as Pleasaunt for Gentlemen That Fauour Learning, as Profitable for All That Wyll Follow Vertue. London: Thomas Woodcocke. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/738.
  • Grann, David. 2009. Lost City of Z: The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon. New York: Doubleday.
  • Grasshoff, Fritz, and Hermann A. Moeck. 1974. Den singende Knochen: Kurzgelochte Parahistorie zur echten Flötenforschung unter Benutzung des Tibilarium Moeckii d. i. Hermann Moecks wissenschaftliche Beschreibung wie man auf Bein und Holz geblasen hat und bläst [Of the Singing Bones: Brief Parahistory of the True Recorder Research, Making Use of the Tibilarium Moeckii, i.e., Hermann Moeck’s Scholarly Description of How One Plays and has Played on Bone and Wood]. Celle: Edition Moeck.
  • Guileville, Guillaume de. 1859. The Booke of the Pylgremage of the Sowle, Translated from the French of Guillaume de Guileville and Printed by William Caxton An. 1483 with Illuminations Taken from the MS Copy in the British Museum. Edited by K.I. Cust. London: Basil Montagu Pickering. https://archive.org/details/bookepylgremage00guilgoog.
  • Guileville, Guillaume de. 1483. The Booke of the Pylgremage of the Sowle [translated from the French of Guillaume de Guileville]. London: William Caxton. http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015053684802.
  • Halfpenny, Eric. 1983. “Serpent in the Midst.” American Recorder 24 (2): 65.
  • Halfpenny, Eric. 1953. “Serpent in the Midst.” Recorder News, New Series 8 (4): 4.
  • Halfpenny, Eric. 1952. “Serpent in the Midst.” Recorder News, New Series 7: 2.
  • Hall, Rodney. 1978. S. Manifold: An Introduction to the Man and His Work. St Lucia: University of Queensland Press.
  • Halliwell, James O. 1850. Palatine Anthology: A Collection of Ancient Poems and Ballads, Relating to Lancashire and Cheshire. London: For private circulation only [printed by C. and J. Adlard]. https://archive.org/details/palatineantholog00hallrich.
  • Harbage, Alfred, S. Schoenbaum, and Sylvia S. Wagonheim. 1989. Annals of English Drama, 975-1700 ; an Analytical Record of All Plays, Extant or Lost, Chronologically Arranged and Indexed by Authors, Titles, Dramatic Companies, &c. 3rd ed. London, New York: Routledge.
  • Hardy, Sophie. 2011. “Edition critique de la Prise d’Alexandrie de Guillaume de Machaut.” Ph.D. dissertation, Orléans: Université d’Orléans. NNT : 2011ORLE1115. HAL-archives-ouvertes. https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00688948/document.
  • Hawkins, Sir John. 1776. A General History of the Science and Practice of Music. 5 vols. London: T. Paine & Sons. https://archive.org/details/generalhistoryof05hawk.
  • Hazlitt, William C., Francis Kirkman, Gerard Langbaine, John Downes, William Oldys, and James O. Halliwell-Phillipps. 1892. A Manual for the Collector and Amateur of Old English Plays. Edited by William C. Hazlitt. London: Pickering & Chatto. https://archive.org/details/manualforcollect00hazl.
  • Herbert, Trevor. 2006. The Trombone. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Herrtage, Sidney J.H., ed. 1881. Catholicon Anglicum: An English-Latin Wordbook Dated 1483. London: Early English Text Society/Trübner. https://archive.org/stream/catholiconanno7500herruoft#page/n9/mode/2up.
  • Holmes, S.C.A. 1966. “Letters: Bacon on the Recorder.” Recorder & Music 2 (1): 26.
  • Howe, David J., and Stephen J. Walker. 1996. Doctor Who: The Handbook: The Third Doctor. London: Virgin Publishing.
  • Howe, David J., Mark Stammers, and Stephen J. Walker. 1994. Doctor Who: The Seventies. London: London Bridge.
  • Howell, S. 1985. “Howell, S. (1985). Ramos de Pareja’s ‘Brief Discussion of Various Instruments.’” Journal of the American Musical Instrument Society 11: 20–21.
  • Hunt, Edgar H. 1981. “Recorder.” In The New GROVE Dictionary of Music and Musicians, edited by Stanley J. Sadie. Vol. 15. London: Playford-Riedt. Macmillan.
  • Hunt, Edgar H. 2002. The Recorder and Its Music. Revised and enlarged. Hebden Bridge: Peacock Press.
  • Irving, John, ed. 1830. Clariodus; A Metrical Romance Printed from a Manuscript of the Sixteenth Century. Edinburgh. https://archive.org/details/clariodusmetrica00mait.
  • Jurgens, Madeleine. 1974. Documents du minutier central concernant l’histoire de la musique (1600-1650) [Documents fromt he central minute books concerning the history of music (1600-1650)]. Vol. 2. Paris: Service d’Edition et de Vente des publications de l’Education Nationale (SEVPEN). https://www.siv.archives-nationales.culture.gouv.fr/mm/media/download/FRAN_ANX_008008.pdf.
  • Kilbey, Maggie. 2002. Curtal, Dulcian, Bajón: A History of the Precursor to the Bassoon. St Albans: Published by the Author.
  • Klausner, David N., ed. 1990. Herefordhsire, Worcestershire. Records of Early English Drama (REED). Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • Koldeweij, Jos. 1993. “‘The Best Flutes Come from a Donkey’s Bone’: The Recorder in 17th-Century Dutch Art = ‘Van Eens Esels Been de Beste Fleuyten Comen’: De Blokfluit in de Nederlandse Kunst van de 17e Eeuw.” In Programma: Holland Festival Oude Muziek, 27 Augustus-5 September 1993, 53–62. Utrecht: STIMU Stichting Muziekhistorische Uitvoeringspraktijk (Foundation for Historical Performance Practice).
  • Kurath, Hans, and Sherman M. Kuhn. 1952. Middle English Dictionary. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
  • La Gorce, Jérôme de. 2002. Jean-Baptiste Lully. Paris: Fayard.
  • Lander, Nicholas S. 1996–2024. “Literary References.” Recorder Home Page. https://www.recorderhomepage.net/instruments/a-memento-the-medieval-recorder/.
  • Lasocki, David R.G. 2012. The Recorder and Other Members of the Flute Family in Writings from 1100 to 1500. Portland, Oregon: Instant Harmony. http://www.instantharmony.net/Music/eb10.php.
  • Lasocki, David R.G. 1984. “The Recorder in the Elizabethan, Jacobean and Caroline Theater.” American Recorder 25 (1): 3–10. http://www.instantharmony.net/Music/AR-02-84.pdf.
  • Lasocki, David R.G. 1998. “Die Blockflöte als Symbol der Liebe [The Recorder as a Symmbol of Love].” ERTA Österreich News 4 (2): 1–5. http://www.instantharmony.net/Music/ERTA-2-1998.pdf.
  • Lasocki, David R.G. 2011. “Researching the Recorder in the Middle Ages.” American Recorder 52 (1): 15–19. http://www.instantharmony.net/Music/AR_Lasocki_MiddleAges.pdf.
  • Lasocki, David R.G. 2006. “The Recorder in Print: 2004. What’s Been Written about the Recorder in Other Publications around the World.” American Recorder 47 (3): 12–21.
  • Lasocki, David R.G. 1984. “The Recorder Consort at the English Court 1540-1673. Part 1.” American Recorder 25 (3): 91–100. http://www.instantharmony.net/Music/AR-08-84.pdf.
  • Lasocki, David R.G. 1982. “Professional Recorder Playing in England 1500-1750. I: 1500-1640. II: 1640-1740.” Early Music, 10: (1): 23–29, (2): 183–91.
  • Lasocki, David R.G. 1983. “Professional Recorder Players in England, 1540-1740.” Ph.D dissertation, Iowa City: The University of Iowa.
  • Lasocki, David R.G. 1984. “The Recorder Consort at the English Court 1540-1673. Part 2.” American Recorder 25 (4): 131–35. http://www.instantharmony.net/Music/AR-11-84.pdf.
  • Lasocki, David R.G., ed. 2005. Musique de Joye. Proceedings of the International Symposium on the Renaissance Flute and Recorder Consort, Utrecht 2003. Utrecht: STIMU Foundation for Historical Performance Practice.
  • Lasocki, David R.G., and Roger Prior. 1995. The Bassanos: Venetian Musicians and Instrument Makers in England, 1531-1665. Aldershot, Hampshire; Brookfield, VT: Scolar Press; Ashgate.
  • Leland, John. 1709. Commentarii de scriptoribus Britannicis. Edited by Anthony Hall. 2 vols. Oxford: Theatro Sheldoniano. https://archive.org/details/commentariidesc00hallgoog.
  • Lesure, François. 1956. “Le recueil de ballets de Michel Henry (vers 1620) [The Ballet Collection of Michel Henry (around 1620)].” In Les fêtes de la Renaissance, edited by Jean Jacquot, 1:205–11. Paris: Centre national de la recherche scientifique.
  • Levin, Lia S. 1981. “The Recorder in the Music of Purcell and Handel.” Ph.D dissertation, Los Angeles: International College.
  • Leyden, John. 1801. The Complaynt of Scotland: Written in 1548. With a Preliminary Dissertation and Glossary. Edinburgh: Printed for Archibald Constable and sold by Mess. T. Cadell Jun. and W. Davies, London.
  • Libin, Laurence. 1972. “Sex and the Flute.” American Recorder 13 (3): 77–85. 0003-0724.
  • Lipman, Amanda. 1994. “Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein.” Sight & Sound 4 (12): 51–52.
  • King, Ronald. 1976. Recorder Humour. London: Schott.
  • Lyndon-Jones, Maggie. 1998. “Communication 1581: Henry VIII’s 1542 and 1547 Inventories.” FoMRHI Quarterly 92: 11–13. http://www.fomrhi.org/uploads/bulletins/Fomrhi-092.pdf.
  • Machaut, Guillaume de. 1340–1341. “Le remède de fortune [The Cure of Ill Fortune].” Paris. Fol. 49v-80. Bibliothèque Nationale de France, fonds français 1 584.
  • Manifold, John S. 1956. The Music in English Drama from Shakespeare to Purcell. London: Rockliff.
  • Marvin, Bob. 1995. “Ruminations of a Maker.” Woodwind Quarterly 9: 84–85.
  • McCabe, William H. 1938. “Music and Dance on a 17th-Century College Stage.” Musical Quarterly 24 (3): 313–22.
  • McGowan, Margaret M. 1978. L’art du ballet de cour en France, 1581-1643. Paris: Centre national de la recherche scientifique.
  • McGowan, Margaret M. 1963. L’art du ballet de cour of France, 1581-1643. Paris: Éditions du Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique.
  • Mezger, Marianne. 1997. “Bearbeitungen für Flageolet und Blockflöte aus Werken H. Purcells und Zeitgenossen [Arrangements for Flageolet and Recorder from the Works of Henry Purcell and his Contemporaries].” In Internationales Blockflötensymposion Darmstadt, ERTA-Kongress 1997, Kongressbericht, Vorträge und Dokumentation, 52–68.
  • Miles, D. 1995. “Jodies: Songs on the Move.” Soldiers Magazine, June.
  • Miller, Clement A. 1993. Bartolomeo Ramis de Pareia, Musica Practica: Commentary and Translation. American Institute of Musicology, Musicological Studies & Documents 44. Neuhausen–Stuttgart: Hänssler-Verlag.
  • Gemmach, Hans. 1986. “ ’Die ‘grüne Blockflöte’ [The ‘Green Recorder’].” Tibia 11 (3): 439–40. http://www.moeck.com/uploads/tx_moecktables/1986-3.pdf.
  • Moeck, Herman J. 1940. Das Blockflötenbüchlein [The recorder Booklet]. Celle: Moeck Beratungsstelle für Hausmusik.
  • Monelle, Raymond. 2006. The Musical Topic: Hunt, Military and Pastoral. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
  • Myers, Alec R. 1959. The Household of Edward IV: The Black Book and the Ordinance of 1478 Manchester. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
  • Nares, Robert. 1822. A Glossary: Or, Collection of Words, Phrases, Names, and Allusions to Customs, Proverbs, Etc. … Which Have Been Thought Ot Require Illustration, in the Works of English Authors, Particularly Shakespeare and His Contemporaries. London: Robert Triphook. https://books.google.com.au/books?id=vRRJAAAAcAAJ&pg.
  • Newman, Joel. 1964. “Handel’s Use of the Recorder.” American Recorder 5 (4): 4–9.
  • Newman, Joel. 1958. “Handel’s Use of the Recorder.” Recorder News, New Series 21: 7–12.
  • Newman, Joel. 1963. “The ‘Easy Recorder’ Myth.” American Recorder 4 (34): 6.
  • Nichols, John. 1788. The Progresses and Public Processions of Queen Elizabeth: Among Which Are Interspersed Other Solemnities, Public Expenditures, and Remarkable Events during the Reign of That … Princess: … with Historical Notes. (To Which Are Subjoined Some of the Early Progresses of King James, Etc.). Vol. 1. London: John Nichols. http://web.wlu.ca/history/cnighman/.
  • Nottingham, Stephen. 2000. Screening DNA: Exploring the Cinema-Genetics Interface. Stevenage: DNA Books.
  • Parrott, Andrew. 1978. “Grett and Solompne Singing: Instruments in English Church Music before the Civil War.” Early Music 1 (2): 184–86.
  • Pattison, Bruce. 1948. Music and Poetry of the English Renaissance. 2nd ed. London: Methuen.
  • Pearsall, Eileen S. 1986. “Tudor Court Musicians, 1485-1547: Their Number, Status and Function.” Ph.D. dissertation, New York: New York University,  Graduate School of Arts and Science.
  • Pepys, Samuel. 1668. “Diary of Samuel Pepys – Complete 1668 N.S.” Project Gutenberg. http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/4195.
  • Pixley, A. 1998. “Archive: The Three Doctors.” Doctor Who Magazine
  • Polk, Keith. 2005. “The Recorder in Fifteenth Century Consorts.” In Musique de Joye. Proceedings of the International Symposium on the Renaissance Flute and Recorder Consort, Utrecht 2003, edited by David R.G. Lasocki, 17–29. Utrecht: STIMU Foundation for Historical Performance Practice.
  • Pound, Ezra, and R. Murray Schafer. 1976. Ezra Pound and Music. The Complete Criticism. Edited by R. Murray Schafer. New York: New Directions Publishing Corporation.
  • Powell, Ardal. 2002. The Flute. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Powell, John S. 2000. Music and Theatre in France, 1600-1680. Oxford Monographs on Music. Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Purdie, Rhiannon. 2002. “Clariodus and the Ambitions of Courtly Romance in Later Medieval Scotland.” Forum for Modern Language Studies 38 (4): 449–61. http://doi.org/10.1093/fmls/38.4.449.
  • Quantz, Johann J. 1752. Essai d’une mé pour apprendre à jouer de la flûte traversiere. Berlin: Chrétien Frédéric Voss.
  • Radford, Alan. 2016. “Items on the Waits of Chester.” The Waits Website: History. Accessed January 3. http://www.townwaits.org.uk/history_chester.shtml.
  • Robbins, Phil. 2003. “Playing the Recorder Only Seems Easy: Recorders ‘Pian E Forte.’” This web-page is no longer available online. Robbins died in 2008.
  • Rowland-Jones, Anthony. 2000. “Quantz Dediddled.” Recorder Magazine 20 (2): 54–55.
  • Rowland-Jones, Anthony. 2009. “Lully’s Use of Recorder Symbolism.” Early Music 37 (2): 217–50.
  • Rowland-Jones, Anthony. 2009. “The Recorder in Western European Countries in the 17th Century before Lully (with Special Reference to France, Spain, England and Italy).” Early Music Performer 28: 17–28.
  • Rowland-Jones, Anthony. 2001. “Some Thoughts on the Word ‘recorder’ and How It Was First Used in England.” Early Music Performer 8: 7–12.
  • Rowland-Jones, Anthony. 2000. “Einige Überlegungen zum Begriff Recorder [Some Thoughts on the Word Recorder].” Tibia 25 (2): 89–97. http://www.moeck.com/uploads/tx_moecktables/2000-2.pdf.
  • Rowland-Jones, Anthony. 2003. Recorder Technique, Intermediate to Advanced. 3rd ed. Hebden Bridge: Ruxbury Publications.
  • Schaefer, Elizabeth D. 1998. “Recorders in Children’s Literature.” American Recorder 39 (1): 15–19, 38–39.
  • Schmidt, Lloyd J. 1959. “A Practical and Historical Source-Book for the Recorder.” Ph.D dissertation, Evanston: Northwestern University. Oak Grove Library Center.
  • Schmied, E. n.d. “Interview: Frans Brüggen.” Goldberg Magazine 11: 2005.
  • Sheale, Richard. 1850. “The Stanley Poem (c. 1558).” In Palatine Anthology : A Collection of Ancient Poems and Ballads, Relating to Lancashire and Cheshire, edited by James O. Halliwell-Phillipps. London: Privately circulated. http://archive.org/stream/palatineantholog00hallrich/palatineantholog00hallrich_djvu.txt.
  • Simpson, Adrienne. 1995. “The Orchestral Recorder.” In The Cambridge Companion to the Recorder, edited by John Mansfield Thomson and Anthony Rowland-Jones, 91–106. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Skeat, William W. 1914. A Glossary of Tudor and Stuart Words Especially from the Dramatists. Edited by A.L. Mayhew. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Skins, Ron. 1985. “The Recorder as Image-Maker.” Recorder and Music 8 (8): 234–36.
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Cite this article as: Lander, Nicholas S. 1996–2024. Recorder Home Page: Quotations: Bibliography. Last accessed 3 December 2024. https://recorderhomepage.net/home/quotations/bibliography/